1101 Chapter+10+Essential+Peripherals+-+Slide+Handouts
1101 Chapter+10+Essential+Peripherals+-+Slide+Handouts
Chapter 10
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: USB Standards
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
USB Standards and Speeds
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• Universal Serial Bus (USB) 1.1 comes in
1.5 Mbps and 12 Mbps; USB 2.0 runs at 480
Mbps
• USB 3.0 and 3.1 Gen 1 run at 5 Gbps; USB
3.1 Gen 2 runs at 10 Gbps
• USB connectors and ports often use colors
to show version
• USB connectors come in many types:
Type-A, Type-B, Type-C, standard, mini,
and micro
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Understanding USB
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• All USB devices connect to built-in USB
controllers, which are in charge of all
connected USB devices
• USB Type-A is generally a downstream
connection; USB Type-B is generally an
upstream connection
• USB Type-C automatically configures the
upstream and downstream connections
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Configuring USB
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• USB devices must have a device driver
• Operating systems come with
thousands of built-in device drivers
• In some cases, you may need to
download the correct driver for a USB
device from the Internet
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Thunder and Lightning
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• Thunderbolt is a general-purpose port
that runs at 10-40 Gbps
• Thunderbolt 1 and 2 use a Mini
DisplayPort connector; Thunderbolt 3
uses a USB-C connector
• The Lightning standard is exclusive to
Apple products but is slowly being
replaced by USB-C
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Optical Media
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• Compact discs (CDs) store 650-700 MB of
data
• Digital video discs (DVDs) store from 4.37
to 15.9 GB
• Blu-rays store from 15.6 GB to 50 capacity
• All optical media comes in read-only
memory (ROM), write once (R), and write
many (RW) versions
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Readers and Scanners
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• Smart cards and magnetic readers are
used to read cards
• Flash memory readers/drives read
many types of flash memory
• SD cards are very popular flash memory
• Scanners read paper documents
• Barcode and QR code scanners read
printed coded labels
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Common Peripherals
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• The most common modern peripherals
are keyboards, mice, webcams, and
external storage
• The term peripherals includes both
input and output devices
• You can personalize your sound
settings in Windows
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode: Webcams and Videoconferencing
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• Webcams enable us to meet remotely
using videoconferencing software
• Two common videoconferencing tools
are Zoom and Microsoft Teams
• Many videoconferencing software
options also allow screensharing
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Installing and Troubleshooting
Episode:
Expansion Cards
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Episode Description
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson
Quick Review
• PCI cards were the first internal plug and
play (PnP) components
• PCIe enables devices to keep up with
higher bandwidth hardware like the CPU
and RAM
• Common PCIe formats include x1, x4, x8,
and x16
• Most modern GPUs utilize the PCIe
standard
CompTIA A+ (220-110x)
Mike Meyers and Steve Nicholson